From Blockchain and Bitcoin to the legalization of marijuana, 2017 was a big year for investors. But get ready because here are the top sectors to invest in for 2018 that could create a whole new generation of millionaires.

When you make the unbelievable believable, you change perception. But when you make the unreal a reality, you change the world. Last week, the Daguela brothers made history. Today, I present you with the updated story of NexOptic Technology Corp. and its flat lens telescope prototype – a small tribute for those who could not attend the official launch event.

Yes, it’s finally here: the world’s first flat lens telescope system by Spectrum Optix and NexOptic Technologies (TSX-V: NXO)(OTC: NXOPF). Watch as the team uses the prototype to capture images of the moon.

3D Signatures Inc. announces clinical study results which confirm that based on a swab from the inside of a patient’s cheek, its proprietary TeloView™ software platform has the ability to identify patients with Alzheimer’s disease (“AD”) and, furthermore, distinguish between mild, moderate, and severe forms of the disease. The results of this confirmatory study have been accepted for publication in the peer-reviewed Journal of Alzheimer’s Disease.

I wrote a check for $50,000 into 3D Signatures. That’s because I believe that this $50,000 could soon be worth many times that. In fact, in just a bit, I’ll show you why a 15,700% potential return is possible from here. And it all starts with a very special situation that could soon propel the shares of this Company.

This could be the most exciting time in cancer-research history; previously deadly diseases may be curable in some patients. But there’s a cost. Bloomberg Gadfly’s Max Nisen looks at why cancer medicines are at the center of the next big drug-pricing fight.

Bees are dying at an alarming rate and no one knows exactly why. Just last year, beekeepers lost 44 percent of their colonies. Bloomberg QuickTake looks at what’s stressing bees out, why that’s stressing us out and what some say we should do about it.

Harry Potter’s invisibility cloak remains the stuff of fiction but scientists in the United Kingdom say they’ve found a different method of making things disappear. Using lasers and crystals the researchers say they can make tiny objects, nano-structures, disappear for less than a million, millionth of a second.

The rise of drug-resistant bacteria has created a huge need for new kinds of antibiotics but you can’t easily synthesize new antibiotics in a lab – you have to find them in nature. Microbiologist Naowarat Cheeptham has been looking for them in an unlikely place: deep underground in caves, where organisms that have evolved in harsh conditions could provide the key to fighting superbugs.